The Alabama Department of Homeland Security maintains a website of groups suspected of including terrorists. I haven’t seen the page, but on the surface, the site seems a little odd — if officials had reason to believe certain groups had terrorist ties, the state a) should arrest them; and/or b) conduct some kind of intelligence gathering operation without the suspects’ knowledge. Putting up a website seems kind of strange.
Regardless, in Alabama’s case, the problem isn’t just the list itself, but rather who’s on it.
The Alabama Department of Homeland Security has taken down a website it operated that included gay-rights and antiwar organizations in a list of groups that could include terrorists.
The website identified different types of terrorists and included a list of groups it suggested could spawn terrorists. The list also included environmentalists, animal rights advocates and abortion opponents.
The director of the department, Jim Walker, said his agency received calls and e-mails from people who said they felt the site unfairly targeted certain people because of their beliefs. He said he planned to reinstate the website but would no longer identify specific types of groups.
The whole thing is just bizarre. Apparently, officials in Alabama identified what they called “single-issue extremists,” considered possible threats by state law enforcement. In most cases, the list included regular ol’, garden-variety liberals with no history of violence or criminal behavior, and no radical agenda to speak of. For example, Equality Alabama advocates gay rights, so it was added to the list.
“Single-issue extremists often focus on issues that are important to all of us,” the website explained. “However, they have no problem crossing the line between legal protest and … illegal acts, to include even murder, to succeed in their goals.”
Far-right activist groups, maybe. But war protestors and gay-rights advocates? I don’t think so.